BIOGRAPHY - WILLIAM BURNS

William
W. Burns, deceased, who for some years was numbered among the energetic and
successful farmers of Ford county, was born in Adams county, Ohio, on the
16th of May, 1818, his parents being James and Mary Burns. His father owned
a farm in the Buckeye state and while spending his boyhood days under the
parental roof there the son attended the public schools, acquiring a fair
English education. When not busy with his text-books he assisted his father
in the farm work and received practical training in all the duties of the
fields.

William W. Burns was married in 1838 to Miss Margaret McClellan, also a
native of Adams county, Ohio, and unto them were born three children. The
wife and mother died in 1856, and in 1859 Mr. Burns wedded Miss L. A.
Wallace, a daughter of John and Mary Wallace, of Adams county, Ohio. There
is one child living by the first marriage, Mrs. S. J. Fitz Henry. There is
also a daughter by the second union, Margaret, now the wife of John
Swearingen, by whom she has six children.

In 1874 Mr. Burns came to Ford comity and purchased one hundred and
sixty acres of land, while subsequently he bought an additional tract of one
hundred and twenty acres adjoining his first farm. He paid forty dollars for
this property, which is today worth two hundred dollars per acre, owing to
the cultivation and improvements he placed upon it and also to the natural
rise in value and owing to the rapid settlement of this part of the state.
Mr. Burns built the house which is now the old homestead and with no tools
save a saw and hammer but he possessed considerable mechanical ingenuity and
the work was very satisfactory when completed.

Mr. Burns gave his political allegiance to the democratic party and
served as school director. He contributed to the building of the United
Brethren and other churches in Gibson City, and was a public-spirited man,
well liked and highly esteemed. In his business affairs he was energetic and
progressive and was one of the first to improve his land by tiling. Mrs.
Burns still survives her husband and a sister lives with her. Both are
members of the First Presbyterian church of Gibson City. She is well known
in the county and the family history justly deserves a place in this volume.